Brilliant

In 1998, my mum taped this show one Thursday night (we were probably
watching something else at the same time), and watched it the next day.
Fairly much routine for dad, and wasn't the best thing mum had ever
seen, although she really enjoyed it. For me, it was a different
matter. I was nine when i saw this one, and ever since then, I've had a
love for history (particually Titanic, I know more about it than all of
my history teachers put together!), and (although it was a few years
later), after several hundred repeated viewings of it, I decided one
day to become a filmmaker (granted, other factors like Peter Jackson,
Steve Spielberg and George Lucas did help ...), but this is what
started it for me. Two of the most important aspects of my life (apart
from friends, family and animals) were both spawned from this one
documentary. I know it sounds really stupid, but its true. OK, I sound
like a nut job now, but I guess this story really isn't a cliché after
all! (well, not much of one!)

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3 out of 6 people found the following review useful:

Excellent documentary on the filming of one of the greatest movies of all time.

This documentary was sort of a combination of the movie itself and of a
documentary of the real ship. I loved the interviews with each of the
participants because each of them relayed how the tragedy became real to
them, and they translated that into performances on screen. My favorite
part was that Cameron actually went down to see Titanic and created
state-of-the-art camera gear to get additional shots that were actually
used
in the picture. I sure wish this were released to video.